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Marketing Planning - Key Ingredients. Brand Strategy Product Strategy Communications Strategy. Competitive SWOT. STRENGTHS. WEAKNESS. OPPORTUNITIES. THREATS. Brand Strategy (use the SWOT as the guide). Target:
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Marketing Planning - Key Ingredients • Brand Strategy • Product Strategy • Communications Strategy
Competitive SWOT STRENGTHS WEAKNESS OPPORTUNITIES THREATS
Brand Strategy (use the SWOT as the guide) • Target: • The audience it is critical the brand win against. It should be tightly defined by demographic and/or psychographic dimensions • Consumer or B2B • Target Insight • Pillars (proof) • What are the key differentiators or reasons why the target audience will want to choose the brand • Is the brand differentiated largely on image or is there significant differentiation on feature/function? • Is it a new innovation with no competition • Brand Promise • This is the singular idea that captures the core differentiated consumer value proposition for the brand. • It will help create alignment across all business functions against a core idea
Product Strategy: Pricing Premium brand: High price, never on sale Budget Brand: Lowest price, highly promotional
Product Strategy: Distribution • “Hard” Products • Direct to consumer • Retail • Direct • Web • Phone • Partner/Reseller Model • Branded • White Label • “Service” Products • Scale?
Communications – Objective setting • Business Objective • What is the business result the marketing initiative(s) are intended to drive? • Sales, Revenue, EBITDA • Communication Objective • What is the consumer result the marketing initiative(s) are intended to drive? • Product awareness, store traffic, visits to the website, shifting brand perceptions * Be as specific as possible!
Communications - What is the Message? • Defining a great key message in a marketing campaign is an art form • Too often marketing communications are ruined by trying to communicate too many things. • The ingredients for a great message: • Singular • Focus on the benefit to the target • Works across all tactics to amplify their effect.
Communications – The mix • Traditional Advertising: Expensive, broad reach, media mix and creative execution can dramatically impact success • PR: A good compliment • Social: Hit and miss. Generally better for post sales customer relationship building • Sponsorship: Brand halo but activation is narrow but highly targeted • Channel: Usually forgotten but perhaps the most important - The media mix is determined from a number of factors including the target, the communication objective, the messaging strategy and budget - Marketing communications success is usually driven by measurement and optimization over time. For a lunch plan there is no magic formula. It is a combination of experience and gut.